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The Years of Rice and Salt
 
 

The Years of Rice and Salt (Hardcover)

by Kim Stanley Robinson (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (115 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Amazon.com

Award-winning author Kim Stanley Robinson delivers a thoughtful and powerful examination of cultures and the people who shape them. How might human history be different if 14th-century Europe was utterly wiped out by plague, and Islamic and Buddhist societies emerged as the world's dominant religious and political forces? The Years of Rice and Salt considers this question through the stories of individuals who experience and influence various crucial periods in the seven centuries that follow. The credible alternate history that Robinson constructs becomes the framework for a tapestry of ideas about philosophy, science, theology, and politics.

At the heart of the story are fundamental questions: what is the purpose of life and death? Are we eternal? Do our choices matter? The particular achievement of this book is that it weaves these threads into a story that is both intellectually and emotionally engaging. This is a highly recommended, challenging, and ambitious work. --Roz Genessee

From Publishers Weekly

Having revolutionized the novel of planetary exploration with his Nebula- and Hugo-winning Mars trilogy (Red Mars, etc.), Robinson is attempting to do the same to another genre with this highly realistic and credible alternate history. It's the 14th century, and the Black Death has swept through Europe, killing not 30% or 40% of the population but 99%. With Europeans now no more than a historical curiosity, the empires of China and Islam spread rapidly across the world. India, caught between superpowers, struggles to maintain its independence until, fueled by a scientific renaissance, its forces besiege and conquer the great city that in our world would be called Constantinople. The New World is discovered by the Chinese, who rapidly settle the west coast, while an Islamic fleet lands at the mouth of the Mississippi. Eventually, the enlightened Indian nation of Travancore comes to the aid of the beleaguered native people of the New World. New technologies appear as the centuries go by and, as often as not, are applied to military ends. Adding a mystical balance and a human note to this counterfactual history is a small cast of recurring characters who live through each episode of the book as soldiers, slaves, philosophers and kings. Dying, they spend time in the afterlife, only to be reborn into the next era, generally with no knowledge of their past lives. Robinson, who has previously demonstrated his mastery of alternate history in the classic short story "The Lucky Strike" and his Three Californias sequence, has created a novel of ideas of the best sort, filled to overflowing with philosophy, theology and scientific theory. (Mar. 5)Forecast: The restrained jacket art, not at all typical of SF, suggests the publisher is aiming to attract intelligent mainstream readers as well. Certainly the depiction of how a moderate or even a liberal Islamic state might evolve couldn't be more timely.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


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Customer Reviews

115 Reviews
5 star:
 (27)
4 star:
 (34)
3 star:
 (19)
2 star:
 (16)
1 star:
 (19)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (115 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating alternate history, July 15 2004
By Alex Frantz (San Leandro, ca USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a complex and challenging novel, covering a group of related characters through multiple lifetimes, over centuries from about 1400 to the present, in an elaborate alternate history in which the black plague almost completely wiped out the population of Europe, preventing the rise of European culture and religion to world dominance. Definitely not a lite read; it takes effort to follow Robinson's alternate history, accompanied by alternate geography and chronology. But readers who have a taste for serious and thoughtful SF will be rewarded for their efforts.

Some highlights from the alternate history: (Contains some spoilers for early sections) about 1400, a mutated and incredibly potent version of the black plague wipes out most of Europe, eliminating it as a political or military force. Christianity is eliminated as a civilization, and the later events are dominated by Chense and Islamic culture. Muslims, some of them refugees from mainstream Islam, gradually repopulate Europe. Meanwhile, a Ming expedition, outfitted to invade Japan, gets caught in a strong Eastern current, misses Japan entirely, and winds up in San Francisco Bay. The expedition is still very much a success, especially when it travels South and discovers the rich mines of Peru. A later Chinese fleet succeeds in conquering Japan.

A group of reformist Muslims, chased by more traditional sects, sails west from Normandy and discovers Manhattan. The Iriquois federation, becoming aware of the presence of alien cultures on both the West and East coasts, forms the North American tribes into a great union, capable of keeping the outsiders largely restricted to the coasts and holding the interior of the continent.

There is more, covering alternate histories of the Industrial Revolution, WWI, and the dicovery of fission, up to an age that look like roughly the present, with increasing global cooperation and, presumably, an alternate Francis Fukuyama to announce the End of Alternate History.

At key events in this timeline, we meet repeatedly the same group of people, recognized by keeping the same initials. The key figures are:

B - A spiritual seeker, frequently a Buddhist clergyman.
I - A scientist or intellectual, fascinated with acquiring knowledge.
K - The activist of the group, at first seeking revenge, at other times power, and ultimately social transformation.

All of these are followed through various lives and deaths, meeting up repeatedly in the Bardo, the between life area of judgment from Tibetan Buddhism. There are some minor accompanying characters, such as S, which is generally a feckless or irresponsible person, often of considerable authority, but these are the main ones.

Robinson has created numerous striking characters from these broad templates: a soldier in Tamerlane's army who ultimately becomes a slave in China, a protective tiger, a servant boy caught in the floods of a Chinese California, a young woman growing up in post-war Islamic France, and many more. It's really a virtuoso trick to fit 600 years of alternate history into one book while still having real characters to live the history, something Robinson has accomplished superbly.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Take notes as you read ..., July 4 2004
Problems: Loooong novel, and so sweeping that it is very hard to remember the characters and their relationships as you leap along in time. At times the interminable detailed personal discussions between characters become wearying, and I skimmed paragraphs or even pages. And last, it was not what I expected: more interpersonal stuff than historical stuff.
Virtues: Really neat characters, including an African slave-eunuch, feminist Islamic women, a Japanese explorer who joins a native [North-American] society, a protective tiger. Wonderful ideas, including the encounters in the bardo, the place of waiting and judgement between lives. I loved the ending!
A good book, but not in a hurry.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Too Much Effort, Jun 29 2004
By Ray P Robidoux (San Jose, CA USA) - See all my reviews
After plowing through slightly over 200 pages, I surrendered. Character after character, generation after generation, there just didn't seem to be much of a point to the meandering commentary. If an author can't generate more interest than this after 200 pages, he doesn't deserve my attention.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars fascinating book!
I don't read fiction very often. I read mostly history, philosophy and liberal-left books on contemporary politics. Read more
Published on Jun 15 2004 by instruggle

1.0 out of 5 stars a big disappointment
Based on available info, I anticipated an interesting alternate history. There may have been one - but it was hidden behind a lot of distracting mumbo-jumbo about previous lives... Read more
Published on Jun 8 2004

2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing Novel
Although I really enjoy KSR's work, The Years of Rice and Salt just didn't do it for me. It is a brilliant idea, but the follow-through was poor at best. Read more
Published on May 17 2004 by R. Dean

5.0 out of 5 stars Great imaginative read!
The Years of Rice and Salt is a tremendous undertaking, and if Kim Robinson does not take it as far as it can go, so what? Read more
Published on Feb 28 2004 by CoffeeGurl

4.0 out of 5 stars The Robinson Touch
Remember the Mars Trilogy? Superb science fiction book, but with a bit of a difference - there was a lot more social interaction than in your average hard core SF novel. Read more
Published on Feb 24 2004 by Peter Mackay

4.0 out of 5 stars An excellent novel, but not for the alternate-history set
I really enjoyed this novel, which starts with an alternate history setting but combines it with strong characters and an interesting exploration of Buddhist and Isalmic... Read more
Published on Feb 16 2004 by Nathan Keir Edel

2.0 out of 5 stars Great idea, poor execution
Being a stubborn Taurean, I almost never give up on a book, no matter how it may fail to match my mood or expectations. Read more
Published on Feb 11 2004 by Anne

3.0 out of 5 stars More thoughtful than most alternate histories
How would the world be different if 99 percent of Europe had been wiped out by the Black Death?

Robinson's answer: It wouldn't. Read more

Published on Feb 9 2004 by Center Man

4.0 out of 5 stars YOR&S will alternately thrill and annoy you.
____________________________________________
I'm only about halfway through this, but it's the most impressive
Robinson I've read since, since.... well, ever, I guess. Read more
Published on Jan 17 2004 by Peter D. Tillman

1.0 out of 5 stars unimaginative - self absorbed drivel
the premise of the book is intriguing ...
but its execution is unimaginative at best - and naively condescending at worst. Read more
Published on Jan 8 2004

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